All is quiet in New York City, or is it? An elderly librarian (Alice Drummond) is about to be scared witless by an even more elderly apparition, a ghost. Not knowing what to do the library calls the university for some help. This is how the movie starts and it keeps you totally engaged in the film till the very end. You have the straight man Egon Spengler, the clueless spook chaser and fantasizer Raymond Stantz and the womanizer and sleaze Peter Venkman. Read more...(823 words, 99 images, estimated 3:18 mins reading time)

A mystical wild ride full of song, beauty and close calls for our favorite archeologist. From the streets of Shanghai to the the foreboding Pankot Palace it is up to Indie to save villages, hot women, kids and even himself. There is evil all around and part of that evil is Dr. Jones’ (Harrison Ford) greed which village elders use against him to see that he set things right. They believe that a great evil is rising in Pankot Palace and that the Thuggee cult, the worshipers of the evil aspect of Kali have stolen their children, stolen their Sivalinga stone from their shrine and have made all their fields and crops dry up. They don’t believe in coincidences and know that Indiana is there, sent from Shiva, to rescue them and their children. As this is a prequel to Raiders of the Lost Ark, Indie is very skeptical about the whole thing. It is not till a young boy half starved wanders into the village and hands him a scrap of fabric that he starts to wonder if the story is true. He knows the children are missing, what he is wondering if it is true is that the stone that was in the village was actually one of the five fabled Sankara stones. If he could get those, and you see it on his face, he would be rich and famous beyond belief. As he put it to Short Round (Jonathan Ke Quan), “Fortune and glory kid, fortune and glory” Read more...(961 words, 68 images, estimated 3:51 mins reading time)